Subject: I have feelings about these topics.
Author:
Posted on: 2016-11-12 02:00:00 UTC
I will try to express them as succinctly as possible so as not to go on for hours and give us both a headache. {= )
On Christian bakeries, etc.
I would like to attempt to disagree with you using a correct premise, so please correct me if I'm wrong:
I am under the impression that these businesses wish to refuse service to gay couples because they wish to avoid condoning sin. Is that right?
If so, then is it not their mission to avoid condoning all sin? Should they not strive to avoid selling to ex-cons, to adulterers, to rapists, to people who take the Lord's name in vain, etc.? Are they doing thorough background checks to be sure they aren't giving aid and comfort to anyone who violates the will of God?
I'm guessing no. So, why not? What is the difference between selling a cake to someone who just got out of prison for, say, vehicular manslaughter, and selling a cake to a gay couple? How about a guy who is abusing his would-be bride and a pair of lesbians? How come some sinners get service with smile and some don't? What's the difference here?
I submit to you that there is none. It's all accounted sin, isn't it, and if your business is selling cakes, or flowers, or whatever, it's all none of your business.
... Okay, I suppose if the name of your business is "Christian Weddings for Straight Christian Couples," you're exempt from the above logic. Have fun catering to your niche market; just don't be surprised if it doesn't pay enough to keep the doors open.
On "basic, obvious truths that have gone unquestioned for thousands of years"
There's a logical fallacy named argumentum ad antiquitam, which is the fallacy of assuming that something is good or right purely because it is old. Simply because a thing has been accepted as true for a long time does not, in and of itself, mean that it IS true. People thought the world was flat for a long time. People thought the Earth was the center of the universe for a long time. People thought the Sun went around the Earth for a long time. People thought some truly terrifying things could cure disease for a long time. I could go on and on.
The point is, "we've always believed this, therefore it must be true" is a fallacious argument. You'll have to do better.
(And yes, the opposite argument argumentum ad novitam, that something is good or right simply because it is new, is equally fallacious, just so that's out there.)
On climate change
I believe my thoughts on why denying climate change is ridiculous can be best expressed by this comic:
Seriously, so what if it's not as bad as 99% of reputable scientists say it is? Can't we make the world a better place anyway?
Also, I can't let this go without mentioning that I've seen a difference in weather patterns with my own eyes over my 31 years of life, which is an incredibly short period of time on a planetary scale. Winter comes later, it's not as cold, and when storms do hit, they're worse. Summers are hot and awful. In between, we're practically getting monsoon rains. This sort of thing is exactly what science has predicted, and consistently accurate predictions are exactly how a scientific hypothesis gets upgraded to a proven theory. (Note correct terminology; please do not take the "it's just a theory" tack with me, I might scream.)
~Neshomeh